Two teenagers were arrested last week after authorities discovered their plan to commit a mass shooting at a junior high school in Uvalde, according to the Uvalde Leader-News.

The teens, ages 13 and 14, are now facing charges of conspiracy to commit murder and have been booked into a juvenile detention center in Del Rio.

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According to the Leader-News, the teens had originally planned to carry out the shooting on April 20, 2022, which would coincide with anniversary of the mass shooting at Columbine High School in Colorado, during their senior year of high school, but one of the suspects persuaded the other to commit the shooting this year at Morales Junior High, where the 14-year-old was a student.

The teens allegedly created a list prioritizing which students they would kill and planned to steal their neighbors' weapons. They planned to detonate explosive devices at the beginning of the attack, hunt down and kill the students on their list and then indiscriminately kill as many students as they could before committing suicide.

Police have not said whether the teens actually acquired any weapons.

The teens appear to have been inspired by the Columbine shooters, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, and often referred to each other using those names, the Leader-News reports.

"One of the students had numerous writings and drawings which depicted weapons capable of causing mass destruction," according to a news release from the Uvalde Police Department obtained by the newspaper. "He wrote about being 'God-like' and killing police and other persons. He had an academic analysis of one of the Columbine shooter's journal."

A student at Morales Junior High learned of the plan and reported it to school officials, who then notified law enforcement authorities.

With the assistance of the Texas Rangers, the Uvalde Police Department was able to identify the two suspected teens and arrest them. According to the Leader-News, authorities are still processing evidence, including messages regarding the attack plot that the two suspects sent each other through school-issued iPads.